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ew York City, November 3rd, 1978, 11:47 PM. Bob Marley stood on a Manhattan corner in the pouring rain, trying to flag a taxi. He'd just performed for 20,000 people at Madison Square Garden. But now, alone on a dark street, he was invisible. Five taxis passed him. Finally, one stopped. The driver looked at Bob's dreadlocks through the window and shook his head. "You look dangerous. Find another cab." Frank Castellano drove away, leaving Bob Marley standing in the rain at midnight. Bob walked two miles to his hotel. He never complained. Never got angry. Three days later, Frank's 16-year-old daughter Angela was hit by a car while riding her bike. She was rushed to the hospital, bleeding, unconscious. Frank was in the ambulance holding her hand when he looked out the window. Bob Marley was standing on the sidewalk. Watching. Their eyes met. Bob placed his hand over his heart. No anger. No judgment. Just compassion. Frank couldn't stop thinking about it. The man he'd called dangerous was showing him more grace than he'd ever shown anyone. Two weeks later, Frank picked up a passenger with dreadlocks. This time, he stopped. And what happened next brought him face-to-face with Bob Marley in a way that shattered him completely. This is the true story of a taxi driver who judged a man by his appearance, and the unimaginable grace that changed two lives forever. Subscribe to Bob Marley: The Untold Spirit for stories that reveal the man behind the legend. ⚠️ DISCLAIMER: This story is inspired by documented accounts of Bob Marley's encounters with discrimination and his transformative compassion. While core themes of prejudice, tragedy, and redemption reflect real patterns in Bob's life, specific characters and dialogue have been dramatized for storytelling purposes.